Saturday, November 9, 2024

Man may have discovered ‘super exciting’ ancient meteor crater — just by looking at Google Maps

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He’s a natural-born search engine.

A Canadian man researching an upcoming camping trip via Google Maps has uncovered what experts believe to be a gigantic crater — left by an ancient space rock.

Joël Lapointe, of Quebec, was scanning through the true north’s Côte-Nord region when he saw the mysterious, roughly nine-mile-wide pit while using the app’s satellite image setting.

A man discovered a possible meteor impact site while browsing a map of northern Canada. x/drcrater

Curious, he passed along his findings to geophysicist Pierre Rochette, who told the Canadian Broadcasting Company the crater — surrounded by a small mountain ring — is “very suggestive of impact.”

After analyzing samples from the site, Rochette detected a mineral called zircon, which shifts in form after events such as meteor impacts.

Zircon, a material consistent with meteor impacts was found in site samples. Getty Images

While more work needs to be done, Rochette was quick to say Lapointe may have uncovered something “major.”

If confirmed, the site has the potential to show a “link between Earth and the outside universe,” Tara Hayden of Western University’s Earth Sciences department told the TV channel.

“It could tell us about when it was delivered to Earth,” Hayden added, noting the deposit could be from an ancient planet, or material from the solar system.

Her colleague, Gordon Osinski, said that modern mapping sites are enabling both amateur and professional sleuths.

A “lot of geologists [are] looking around and occasionally making discoveries like this,” he said.

“It’s quite easy…these days to go [online] and find structures that are circular or semi-circular in origin. You know, nine times out of 10 they’re not [craters],” added Osinski.

A high volume of meteor craters discovered on Earth are in Canada.

To find out more, Osinski and his team hope to eventually make their own field trip to the remote location.

“It’s super exciting,” said Osinski, noting that only 200 craters have been uncovered, 31 of which are in Canada.

“It doesn’t happen too often.”

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